While David is sitting outside his apartment trying to devise a plan to smuggle marijuana out of Mexico, a man and his family drive up in a RV. The driver explains that he's lost and cheerfully asks David for directions, to which David responds with "Fuck off, real-life Flanders."

Bart makes a cameo appearance during the song "That's How You Shmooze", when Dot Warner sings the line "And for The Simpsons, you suggested that they call the kid "Bart". Only Bart's hair was seen in the episode to avoid copyright claims.

When an African-American woman hugs Robert Freeman in her living room and flipping the channel on the TV till she stop, "And what about her?" she ask, then Robert said, "No, Marge Simpson's not prettier than you, either".

In a fake trivia contest, one of the questions asked is "Which cartoon features a bar called Moe's?". The first contestant answers "Yes...yes...uh... Speedy Gonzales". And the second contestant says "Simpsons...brother" and "who doesn't know what Moe's is?". The previous contestant says "I didn't".

Brent put Marge Simpson on a list of who not to accept checks from in order to mess with Oscar. When Oscar came in he read the list and, not recognizing any of the names, got very angry and told Brent not to accept any checks from Marge Simpson.

A parody of The Simpsons entitled "The Stimpsons", in which Homer (with Bart's hair) is really Captain Pugwash, Marge Simpson (with Lisa's hair) is Mr Benn in disguise, Bart Simpson (with Homer's hair) is actually Charley the Cat and the sofa is Bagpuss under a blanket. It is also revealed that Lisa Simpson (with Marge's hair) is actually the robotic number 2 from the previous BBC television idents.

In the casino, Marge Simpson is seen operating a slot machine. This is a reference to The Simpsons episode "$pringfield (Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Legalized Gambling)", in which Marge develops a gambling addiction.

Homer Simpson is one of the patrons at the Fox Hole strip club. He can be seen seated near Spanky's doctor during the scene where Clara scans the room looking for her father.

A reference to the floorboard gag is made when as the camera moves up between the floorboards two skeletons that resemble Bart and Lisa Simpson can be seen. In the same episode, a house resembling the Simpsons' house is seen with Bart hanging out the window dead.

Ned Flanders is seen in the hearing Senate cheering with Clara in the ship behind Wooldoor, among all the Simpsons characters those have made their cameo appearances, Ned's face was Completely seen, except his shirt was orange unlike his usual green one in the original Simpsons, also his flesh was like his skin.

Duckman watches a number of old home movies, one of them depicting the Simpsons' living room. His eldest son, Ajax, is also seen, dressed like Bart. Duckman is listening to the TV, on which the announcer lists the winning lottery numbers. When he realizes he won the lottery, Duckman shouts "Woo-hoo!" His younger sons, being only babies, then crawl over and eat the lottery ticket, to which Duckman cries "D'oh!" His wife is also seen, dressed like Marge.

"Ride the High School"

6

A boy whose appearance is similar to that of Bart's is seen at the boarding school for gifted children.

One of the characters Duckman turns into when he's hooked up to the TV transmitting device is Homer Simpson.

"Duckman and Cornfed in 'Haunted Society Plumbers'"

56

Homer appeared at the end of the episode. In the episode, Duckman and Cornfed try to recover a stolen jewel. They believe there is a ghost involved, who at the end happens to be Homer. While the credits roll, Homer fails several times trying to repeat his line. Dan Castellaneta was the guest star voice for this episode.

When Timmy Turner, Future Timmy Turner, Cosmo and Wanda travel through the world of television to stop Vicky from taking over the world, one TV show they travel into is a parody of The Simpsons, entitled "The Feldmans". It features a chalkboard gag parody, parodies of Krusty, Ned Flanders and Barney Gumble, as well as Blinky (the parodied version of Barney Gumble gains a third eye, like Blinky, while swimming in toxic nuclear waste), the opening sequence (without the title screen), the theme song and a couch gag. Vicky is seen dressed like Bumblebee Man (except as a ladybug) (with Mr. Burns' face), writing "Vicky Was Here" on the "Wintergreen" Nuclear Power Plant. In the parodied opening sequence, some street graffiti that says "El Vicko" can be seen, obviously a parody of El Barto. Moe's Tavern is also parodied as "Mike's Tavern". The town of "Wintergreen", is a parody of Springfield (the parody name is seen on the parodied version of the Elementary School). In the parodied version of the chalkboard gag, Timmy Turner writes: "This is the sincerest form of flattery" (referencing how the show is imitating The Simpsons), with right hand, unlike Bart Simpson, who writes with left hand. In the parody, Timmy has Bart's shoes, but with a different color and without a white circle and Adult Timmy has Homer's beard.

When Cosmo was pregnant with Baby Poof, he vomits and thinks about naming his child "Barfolomew", a reference to Bart's full name. When Cosmo thinks about Barfolomew, the child he imagines is a parody of Bart Simpson.

Dr. Gregory House goes to see Dr. Lisa Cuddy with a medical reason, which he says was a ruse to just check up on her boobs, which House refers to as Patty and Selma. When Cuddy questions why House named her boobs after "someone's aunts", House says that it is a "compliment as they are always smokin'".

As Dr. House and Dr. Cuddy are dancing at an '80s dance, a woman dressed as Marge Simpson is seen in the background.

Hyacinth and the Italian are riding bumper cars in a place where The Simpsons billboards are on the wall, signaling rules of not what to do in the bumper cars at the Pleasure Beach theme park in Great Yarmouth.

David Champion (Dan Castellaneta) was a theme park worker who played Homer Simpson. He was fired after he removed the head of the costume in public. As part of the trial, the jury have Homer Simpson heads on too.

Brick Heck goes trick-or-treating dressed as Sgt. MacKenzie, and one of the neighbors thinks he is dressed as Groundskeeper Willie. When he goes to the door of another neighbor, he mentions that he's not dressed as him, and some other characters neighbors thought he was dressed as.

Special Agent Anthony DiNozzo was talking to a person over the phone, asking if he knew some people. The guy over the phone misheard him and thought he said Adam West, which then led to them discussing Burt Ward and his appearance on The Simpsons. Tony asked which episode he appeared in before his boss, Leroy Jethro Gibbs, walked into the room, causing Tony to stop.

The Simpsons was one of the programs in Paddy's Planner. Denise van Outen and Nicky Byrne took part in Paddy's Planner, and in their round they chose The Simpsons as one of the programs they would receive a question related to. The question was "What is Bart and Lisa's baby sister called?" Nicky Byrne said "Lisa"; the correct answer is "Maggie".

Pat O'Brien reports about a new, conservative version of The Simpsons. Homer Simpson orders freedom fries at the Kwik-E-Mart, but Apu invokes his heathen God and calls Homer a fat, stupid American. The Department of Homeland Security then take Apu to the Abu Ghraib prison while the Simpson family celebrates at a barbecue. It ends with a naked Apu repenting his actions while chained to the neck by Lynndie England.

"Major League of Extraordinary Gentlemen"

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Bart Simpson writes several phrases on the chalkboard, including: "Why aren't I aging?"

Cat acts in a play titled Baberaham Lincoln (where she portrays a British, female version of Abraham Lincoln). At the start of the play, she says that she lived in Springfield long before The Simpsons.

A man (Mikey Day) said he was bullied for looking like Bart Simpson. He said people told him to "go back to Springfield", laughed at him like Nelson and said Bart's catchphrases to him. He also said his "name is Bert Sampson".

In the bathroom there is wrote something backwards in the wall. Looking in the mirror it reads "Pick Up Bart". This is a reference to the episode "Brother from the Same Planet", in which Milhouse wrote that on the wall written (which itself is a reference to The Shining).

"Critical Mass"

There is a secret place which has wrote on the wall "Sector 7-G" and a large computer with a lot of donuts in it.

In a blog post on the TF2 website explaining the development of the class "Demoman" (a black Scottish cyclops), the developers mentioned that they made the character black because at the time it looked too much like a "Groundskeeper in Springfield".

In the chapter 1 ending, when Kris can visit the town, they can met with Alphys, which to congratulate on trying so hard to find the chalk, she gifts Kris the home-made DVD collection of the Symptons, the sitcom about the middle-class monster family, containing every episode in all 28 seasons, being the funniest, most quotable show ever. But then warns Kris to not watch after the second season, since they rebooted it as Symptons Turbo, where they all starting driving their own motor-vehicles and then proceeding to blab about the show before Kris interrupts her saying they don't want to watch it.Funny enough, the episode that aired a few days after the release of the game, "Baby You Can't Drive My Car", focused on a self-driving car company coming to Springfield and poaching all of the power plant employees with their fun work environment, focusing on cars.

One of the images on the back cover shows a guy walking from a 7-Eleven with a "super big gulp" cup. In the background there is a banner running above the store's front door advertising Squishees and donuts. Homer also appears on the banner. This same image appears on page 10 of the book.

The cover features a drawing of the Simpsons on the couch and above, the text "TV: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly by The Simpsons, TV's Hot New Prime-time Family". There presumably was a review of the show on Page 4.

September 1990for September 22-28, 1990

The cover features Bill Cosby and Bart sitting on his shoulder, with the text "Bart Simpson and Bill Cosby face off on Thursdays" below.

1991

Bart is featured on the cover of the 2000th issue; in the issue there is also a "Where's Bart?" section on page 62 asking readers to try to find Bart in a quilt of TV Guide covers.

November 1992for November 28, 1992-December 4, 1992

The cover features a section saying "MAGGIE SPEAKS! We Ask Famous Fans What She'll Say".

January 1998

Four different covers were released; each side by side would form a couch scene with Bart, Homer, Grandpa, Selma, Patty, Marge, Maggie, Santa's Little Helper, and Snowball II.

October 1998for October 17-23, 1998

The cover shows the family in costumes next to information about what will be included in that issue's Halloween preview, one of the series covered being The Simpsons.

October 2000for October 21-27, 2004

There were twenty-four special covers, each showing the face of a different character, part of the "The 24 Secret Stars of The Simpsons" series. The characters were Mr. Burns, Captain McAllister, Krusty, Apu, Milhouse, Chief Wiggum, Sideshow Bob, Ned, Abe.

December 2004for December 12-18, 2004

Four different covers were released, each containing a special-effects ornament.

December 2009December 7-20, 2009

Five different covers were released: one shows an image of Homer wearing his Mr. Plow jacket and underpants, one shows an image of "Hulk Homer", one shows an obese homer wearing a muumuu from "King-Size Homer", one shows an image of "Colonel Homer", and one shows Homer wearing the Stonecutters' Stone of Shame. All of them have bolded text, stating "D'oh! The Simpsons Turns 20".

October 2011October 24-November 6, 2011

The cover shows a promotional image of that year's "Treehouse of Horror" episode.

April 4, 2013for April 8-21, 2013

The cover is one of six special 60th anniversary cover for TV Guide. The image on the cover is a collage put together to show Homer saying "D'oh!" in the Simpsons' backyard.

April 2014for April 21-May 4, 2014

The cover advertises the LEGO episode "Brick Like Me" and features LEGO Marge and Homer Simpson in his original form.

While not specifically The Simpsons media, "So Dumb (Homer's Lament)" is a song by Dan Castellaneta featuring the voices of many of his more popular The Simpsons characters from an otherwise The Simpsons-free album.

A table shows that if you were Bart or Lisa's age when The Simpsons first started, you'd be Homer or Marge's age now. The mouse-over text for the image states that a spell was put on Springfield so Bart would be 10 forever and not get a Hogwarts letter.

In the episode, Trollin', a dog biscuit claims to Orange that he is a dog biscuit, and says that the thing next to him is a dog biscuit. The trolls think that the joke was ripped off. One of the trolls names The Simpsons as the show the joke was ripped off from.